I am a PhD candidate in English at 91 Berkeley, where I alsoserve as Program Associate for the Townsend Center for the Humanities and Assistant Editor for the journalCritical Times. For the 2026–2027 academic year, my research is supported by a Townsend Dissertation Fellowship and a Graduate Scholarship Award from the Phi Beta Kappa Northern California Association.
Most generally, my research addresses the psychic and social costs of making sexuality into a basis for solidaristic political action. In my dissertation,Alone Song: Anticollectivism, AIDS, and the Edge of Solidarity,I take up this question byturning toan archive of self-destructive poets, bitter literary critics, outed public intellectuals, and other cultural figures who felt themselves at odds with the collectivism of AIDS activist movements. In doing so, I offer aversion of AIDS history that makes central the limit cases of queer theory’s normative solidarity with figures of its past.
In addition to queer theory and HIV/AIDS history -- the subjects of my dissertation -- my research interests includelyric theory, Oscar Wilde, Northern Irish poetry, and mysticism.
